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Cherry shoe cabinet

I started this project a while ago but only spend some of the weekends on it. It is supposed to be a shoe cabinet.
I usually have a sketch of what I want to build on the paper with a few rough dimensions and go from there. For the first time I'm building without any drawing or plan written (everything is in my head).
I wanted to have bowed raised panel doors. I wanted to get a vacuum press to try but never got around to order the parts and build it (maybe for the next time).
The project started with selecting some curly Cherry:

Add a layer of vinyl to protect against glue. To do the clamping I've placed a 1/8" thick piece in the middle under the 2x4 so that when I clamp down I have downward pressured at the ends of the 2x4's as well as the middle.

All the parts are made. The parts for the door frame are made bigger so that two pieces are made from one. I found it would be easier to run a taller piece on the shaper than shorter ones.
Here is the setup to do the curved pieces on the shaper:

Still have to do the grooves in the frame to receive the panel, then glue everything up. Making these two doors has taken waaaay longer than I thought.
If I was going to do it again I would use a different method instead of bent lamination (solid pieces glued and then bow the panel with a router setup like for planing a bench-top).

The glue-up of the doors went well. Initially I had planed to use the form to clamp them using a band clamp (and strapping the door to the form) but it was very cumbersome and difficult to do (glaUsing those large dominos at the miter joints allowed me to clamp them like a regular door.

In order to make a rebate on the back of the panel made this little jointer out of my trim router. That piece of wood is a cut-off from the frame piece that has the same curve as the panel.
I add a few layers of tape to one side:

Still have to do lots of sanding and also fit the shelves. Looks like I need to add a support in the middle as the top/bottom do sag a little under pressure and that causes problems with
the very small gap between the doors. The doors are inset at an angle and that was a HUGE pain to get the distances right for installation of hinges!